International disputes: Joins other Caribbean states to counter Venezuela's claim that Aves Island sustains human habitation, a criterion under United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, which permits Venezuela to extend its Economic Exclusion Zone/continental shelf over a large portion of the eastern Caribbean Sea.

Geography

St. Kitts, the larger of the two islands, is roughly oval in shape
except for a long, narrow peninsula to the southeast. Its highest point is
Mount Liamuiga (3,792 ft [1,156 m]). The Narrows, a 2-mile- (3-km-) wide
channel, separates the two islands. The circularly shaped Nevis is
surrounded by coral reefs and the island is almost entirely a single
mountain, Nevis Peak (3,232 ft [985 m]). A volcanic mountain chain
dominates the center of both islands.

Government

Constitutional monarchy.

History

When Christopher Columbus explored the islands in 1493, they were
inhabited by the Carib people. Today, most of the inhabitants are the
descendants of African slaves. The British settled on St. Kitts—formerly
St. Christopher—in 1623, and on Nevis in 1628. The French settled on St.
Kitts in 1627, and an Anglo-French rivalry lasted for more than 100 years.
After a decisive British victory over the French at Brimstone Hill in
1782, the islands came under permanent British control. The islands, along
with nearby Anguilla, were united in 1882. They joined the West Indies
Federation in 1958 and remained in that association until its dissolution
in 1962. St. Kitts–Nevis-Anguilla became an associated state of the United
Kingdom in 1967. Anguilla seceded in 1980, and St. Kitts and Nevis gained
independence on Sept. 19, 1983.

A drop in world sugar prices hurt the nation's economy through the
mid-1980s, and the government sought to reduce the islands' dependence on
sugar production and to diversify the economy, promoting tourism and
financial services. In 1990, the prime minister of Nevis announced that he
intended to seek an end to the federation with St. Kitts by 1992, but a
local election in June 1992 postponed the idea. In Aug. 1998, 62% of the
population voted for Nevis to secede, but the vote fell short of the
two-thirds majority required.

The country had been blacklisted by various international financial
agencies for improprieties in its off-shore financial-services industry,
but by 2002, it had been removed from all such lists.

On January 1, 2013, Sir Cuthbert Sebastian retired from his post of governor-general, a post he had held since 1996. Sebastian was replaced by Sir Edmund Lawrence, the managing director of the St. Kitts-Nevis Anguilla National Bank.

Two years later, Timothy Harris became the third prime minister. Harris succeeded Denzil Douglas who had served as prime minister for twenty years. Douglas battled a stronger opposition and feuds with members of his own cabinet leading up to the 2015 election. Douglas contested the election after losing with a vote of 7-4. A member of the popular alliance, Team Unity, Harris took office on Feb. 18, 2015.